Ice Alaska, The World Ice Art Championships

The World Ice Art Championships at Ice Alaska is probably the single coolest thing that I’ve seen in Fairbanks this winter. Ice sculpting underwent a renaissance in interior Alaska in 1988 when organizers decided to revive the spirit of the 1930’s winter carnivals by flying in ice sculptors in from around the world for an event to be known as Ice Alaska. Believe it or not, for that first exhibition and many years to follow Alaska actually trucked in ice purchased from a company in Seattle, all the way to Fairbanks. Laughable you might say, and so does everyone else. Apparently, the processes of harvesting ice had been lost to the years with the coming of modern refrigeration and there was no other way to immediately guarantee the quality of the ice, which was of great concern after the considerable expense of flying sculptors to Fairbanks for the event. As it were, that first event went off without a hitch and somehow Ice Alaska became renowned for the quality of its ice. As the story goes, the first sculptures of the 1988 event were shown samples of Fairbanks’ natural ice to the tune of raving reviews. The rest is history.

Here we are in 2010 and the World Ice Art Championships have been held in Fairbanks at Ice Alaska for the past 21 years. The event has become the end all be all of ice carving the world over. I say congratulation to those organizers who sat around some cold little cabin in 1988 and forwarded the revival of Alaskan ice sculpting. This year more than 1,500 tons of ice will be harvested from O’Grady pond adjacent to the Ice Park arena in Fairbanks to produce some 100+ sculptures from 70 teams representing nearly a dozen countries. The ice itself has earned the nickname “The Arctic Diamond” and has been exported to countries as far away as Israel. The ice harvest is an event in itself and didn’t ultimately come to fruition until 1998. The ice harvesting crews are constructed entirely of volunteers and have been since that time. It is a process unique to Fairbanks and is one that experiences constant evolution. Today, the ice is cut from the lake with a custom built chainsaw apparatus with bars as long as 60” in length and moved from O’Grady pond to the Ice Park Arena with extendable boom fork lifts.

The competition itself is split into two categories. There is the single block competition where sculptors are provided just one 3’×5’×8′ (90 cm × 150 cm × 200 cm) block of ice weighing in at almost 8,000 pounds from which to create their sculpture. Teams are limited to two persons. In the multi block competition each team of up to four persons receives 10 blocks approximately 6’×4’×3′ (180 cm × 100 cm × 90 cm) and weighing in at over 4,000 lbs each. Power tools are permitted across both events, but the use of heavy machinery is only permitted in the multi block event.

I’m looking forward to seeing who the winners are, but without further adieu – Enjoy the show!

About Brandon Edward

Greetings, I am the bar keep of this fine establishment. In the tradition of a good bar keep I want to know what you think about the article you’ve just read and the service we’re providing here at freewheelings. Can’t find your particular brand of scotch? Maybe we have it in the back, just ask. Use the comments section below.

Laugh. I can relate to that. The first snow here was about October 14th and it’s still on the ground six months later along with every subsequent snowfall. I just want to see some grass and rediscover t-shirts!

That’s a complicated question. This blog is based on wordpress and the atahualpa theme that I modified myself to create the look and feel. The content is created by means of a boatload of plugins meshed together in the wordpress structure. It was not just created by a program. It is the result of hundreds of hours of work using different programs. Thanks for stopping by.

Thanks. I personally think the ice harvest and its history are as interesting as the sculptures themselves, but on average only 1 out of every 25 visitors or so actually clicks the link. That boggles my mind.